first steps in web design concepts and construction dr. ramesh mehay course organiser, bradford

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First Steps in Web DesignConcepts and Construction

Dr. Ramesh Mehay

Course Organiser, Bradford

introduction• Originally designed in the 1960s • as a way for scientists to communicate their research• Exponential growth of web sites since 1992

• the Web has become increasingly commercialised and

entertainment focused.

mapping it all out

www or intranet

client

browser (Internet Explorer)

2. browser requestsinformation

3. information sentto browser

1. request madeto browser

4. Browser displaysinformation

servers

info found

terms• Web pages are written in a language called HTML

(HyperText Markup Language)• The website address is often referred to as an URL (Uniform

Resource Locator)• Frontpage is a web design program that codes the pages

(into html) as you create them.

web design – the first steps2 questions• 1. what is the purpose of the site? (AIMS) • 2. who is the site for (audience)

Consider including a one sentence tagline on the homepage

purpose• This site is meant to be informative.• The site will be used to sell a product.• The site will be used to recruit new members to our

organization.• The main purpose of the site is educational.• The primary purpose of the site is to be a newsletter.• I wanna spread some gossip.

who?• Students at a university.• People between the ages of 18 and 24.• Expert Internet users.• Patients• Internet newbies.• My mom• My clever cat

LET’S PLAY

• Microsoft Frontpage

• Build a site map – good old pen and paper

• Develop a web page template

• Title each page

• Determine and add content

• Link pages together and build a navigation structure

site map

files

motorbikes

product news technical infogallery

vintage sports members’

The basic unit of any website is a web page

The main web page from which everything stems is called the homepage (often identified by file name index.htm or default.htm)

Site Mapping

• Before doing anything technical, sit down with pen and paper (lots of paper)

• Use rectangular paper cut outs to represent your web pages – write on them

• Now play around on a large table – rearranging them until the structure is just write

• When you’ve got it, write it out in a way similar to what you saw on the previous slide.

Good web design

• CONTRAST

• REPITITION

• ALIGNMENT

• PROXIMITY

• NAVIGATION

• e

• TEXT PRESENTATION & FONTS

disobey these rules and youwill get a CRAP NeT

CONTRAST

this is an example of poor contrast

another example of how contrast provides a warning

contrast to make something stand out

Use active white space to make your contentstand out on the page.

universal warning sign

white on black is harder to read than black on white

REPITITION

ALIGNMENT

Centre alignment makes finding the beginning of a new line of text much more difficult.

Each line tends to be a different length. As a result it is much more tiring to read text with

centre alignment. The eye is constantly guessing and searching for the start point.

In addition, centre alignment causes odd line lengths. These odd lengths cause a sort of "choppiness" in how the text reads. It lacks the smooth flow that tends to occur with left

alignment.

PROXIMITY

NAVIGATIONThere are several basic styles of navigation

[HORIZONTAL] [HORIZONTAL] [HORIZONTAL] [HORIZONTAL]

VERTICALVERTICALVERTICALVERTICALVERTIVALVERTICALVERTICALVERTICAL

not recommended

TOP

BOTTOM

LEFT RIGHTuse thethree click rule

primary

secondary

FONTS

• Arial• Times New Roman • Courier

BatangMonotype CorsivaHaettenschweiler

TEXT PRESENTATION

Large text is hard to read because people can only read one or two words at a time.

Small text is difficult to read because many computer screens cannot clearly display the tiny characthers. Also, small print is hard to see under the best of circumstances.

Text size ranges from 1 to 7. 1 is the smallest, 7 the largest. Default is 3.

HTML also allow setting relative sizes. Included are +1 through +7 and -1 through -7. These sizes are not specific, but, are relative to the browser default size.

how to make horrible websites• Add turn-off colours or bad contrast• Using silly fonts at silly sizes• Add tonnes of pictures (slows site down)• Add loads of flashing images (jpegs, gifs,bmps)• Tonnes of pages (three hundred clicks to get anywhere)• Background music

top tips• Use the KISS principle (Keep It Simple, Stupid) (beware of too much text on a webpage, plenty of white space

too)

• Develop a common "look and feel" for the entire web site.• Make sure every web page has a clear focal point• Make sure that your webpages use names that indicate

what their content is.• Always test your website and webpages• Revisit your aims and objectives – have they been met?• Get other people to look at and explore your website and

get feedback from them• Beware of exhaustive lists of links – they’ll never get

visited. Keep It Simple – few important ones

If you plan to put it on the web

• Make sure you use a sensible domain

• www.bradfordvts.co.uk = good

• www.hotmail.com/sp1/malcolminthemiddle.htm = bad

final thought• The Web is a great source for information but remember it is

not the only source.• A tremendous amount of information is only published in

paper format such books, reports, newspapers, magazines and academic serials.

• Over 100,000 different book titles and 20,000 magazine and other serial titles are published every year all over the world!

Sources• http://www.colorado.edu/AmStudies/lewis/Design/

sofar.htm#basic• http://library.albany.edu/imc/webdesign/index.htm• http://build-website.com/guide/index.html = good basic guide• http://www.plainenglish.co.uk/webdesign.html• http://www.microsoft.com/Education/FrontPageTutorial.aspx

click on Frontpage 2002 Creating a course web for some good Frontpage advice

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